Some big changes are coming for pedestrians and motorists alike starting next week: a new set of Connecticut laws giving far more power (and, hopefully, safety) to those traveling on foot vs vehicles.
Long before we had cars (or even horses) and
trains, folks took to the roads on foot to get where they were going. But with motorized transport came the
inevitable conflicts.
Why the
new laws now? Because something like 1500 pedestrians and
500+ bike riders get hit by cars each year in this state. Many towns don’t even have sidewalks and
those that do still seem to favor motorists over folks on foot.
Effective October 1st, these are the
new
rules:
1) At crosswalks,
drivers must yield to pedestrians who show intent to cross by extending an arm
or moving into the crosswalk.
2) A driver or
passenger cannot open a vehicle door in a way that hits or gets in the way of a
pedestrian or bicyclist.
Violators could
face a $500 fine. They’re not kidding.
The new laws remind
us that pedestrians and bicyclists matter.
And while they should exercise caution, too, it’s motorists who will
have to start paying more attention as they careen down the roads.
Mind you, these
new street crossing laws only affect designated crosswalks, not the mid-block
impatience of jaywalkers. I mean, let’s
be reasonable, right?
Of course, it’s all
going to take some getting used to here in the “land of steady habits” where
motorists have always taken priority. But
it will be like deja vu all over again for me…
I grew up in Toronto where pedestrians were
always granted supremacy over cars. I
distinctly remember as a child when the first Pedestrian Crosswalks opened. They were mid-block and designated by large,
illuminated signs and all-too-visible paint on the roadways.
All a walker needed to do was approach the curb
at a crosswalk and point in the direction they wanted to cross. For a kid, that was a lot of power: a single pointed finger would bring traffic
to a halt so you could then safely cross the streets.
Pedestrians had the power, not motorists.
Of course, the drivers all obeyed. Never once do I remember a car crossing my
path as I triumphantly marched to the other side. I didn’t even need to make eye contact with
the drivers or wave franticly “stop, you idiot”. They just did. Of course, they were Canadians.
If anything, I might give them a wave or
nod. Pretty cheeky for a 10-year-old
kid.
Contrast that willing compliance with
Connecticut where drivers regularly cruise through stop signs and run red
lights with apparent impunity. If
drivers don’t know and observe these new laws, someone’s going to get seriously
hurt, regardless of age or cheek.
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